It’s been 9 days. Puerto Rico has almost no cell service

From our friends at CNN Money:

It's been 9 days. Puerto Rico has almost no cell service Relief supplies stuck at Puerto Rico port

More than a week after Hurricane Maria slammed into Puerto Rico, the island remains plagued by a communications blackout.

Just over 90% of all cell sites in Puerto Rico were still out of service as of Thursday, according to the most recent report from the Federal Communications Commission. In each of the island's 78 municipalities, at least 75% of cell sites down.

This has only made an incredibly difficult situation even harder. Millions of Americans island must struggle to stay in touch with loved ones and get access to important information.

"Maria created restoration challenges unlike those we've seen in other storms," Joan Marsh, executive VP of regulatory and state external affairs for AT&T (T, Tech30), wrote in a blog post Thursday. (AT&T has agreed to acquire Time Warner, the parent company of CNN. The deal is pending regulatory approval.)

Among the daunting list of challenges highlighted by various companies this week: an island-wide power outage, extensive damage done to fiber connections, and logistical issues getting satellite trucks to the island.

After Hurricane Irma, for example, Marsh says AT&T was able to "provide a big shot in the arm" to the worst hit areas of the Florida Keys by sending in trucks with satellite and cell equipment. But there are only limited options to fly these trucks to Puerto Rico, and shipping by sea takes longer.

"We currently have three Satellite trucks on a FEMA barge due to land next week and three more on the way [Thursday] morning," Marsh says.

There are also sincere safety concerns, as fuel needed for generators gets stolen and workers risk being held up at gunpoint on the roads.

"Security is a very serious issue on the island and is causing delays for all telecommunications companies," a spokesperson for T-Mobile told CNN. "It's a very serious and sad situation."

Luis Romero, VP of the Puerto Rico Telecommunications Alliance, called attention to the security issue in a letter this week to President Trump.

"We need security. The fuel trucks are being hijacked and scant fuel we have is being stolen from the emergency power plants," Romero wrote in the letter. "The current situation of total chaos will lead to a total blackout of communications if not controlled today."